tv CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell CBS July 10, 2020 3:12am-3:40am PDT
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in every four tests now comes up city unveils a black lives matter mural right in front of trump tower. positive, lines to get screened stretch for blocks and supplies new video in the shooting of breonna taylor. are running out. never before seen footage from a the misery caused by the virus neighbor captures the chaotic is only being amplified by its moments after the police raid economic impact. we learn today another 1.3 that left breonna taylor dead. million americans filed for new details tonight on the investigation. breaking news, a tropical storm oyment ithe past week. in the mean time, today the head forms off the coast of north carolina. new york city in its tracks of the cdc backed off the idea that his agency would change its tonight. "glee" star disappears, the guidelines for reopening schools after the vice president frantic search for answers after actress naya rivera goes missing suggested that it would. on a california lake. her four year old son found alone, asleep on their boat, and tonight, the country's top infectious disease expert dr. what he told police about his mom and what investigators are anthony fauci says he believes the country's hardest hit states should consider pausing plans to reopen. saying tonight. more than three million cases of and pandemic puppets, how one coronavirus have now been confirmed in the u.s. and more in bow iwnhe covsi than 133,000 people have been killed by the virus nationwide. hands down.th is ths ws president trump didn't address thorah o'donnelomhe nation's ca. >> brennan: good evening. and thank you for joining us. that growing death toll today
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norah is off. but he did lash out at the i'm margaret brennan. supreme court after the justices as we come on the air the coronavirus crisis nationwide is ruled against him, clearing the way for a new york grand jury to not only deepening, it is more see his tax returns. there is a lot of reporting to deadly. get to and our team of correspondent is covering it the country's three biggest states, california, florida and all. cbs's david begnaud leads our texas are all reporting their largest one-day death toll since coverage tonight from orlando, the pandemic began. david? >> reporter: margaret, good evening, we are outside disney hospitals there are world because today they reopened to their annual pass holders as they are known, despite the fact that here in orange county where most of disney world is located new coronavirus infections have jumped 130% over the last 12 days. despite that, disney world is set to open up to the general public saturday. loyal annual pass holders got first dibs inside disney world today. but the maes the same. visitors and employees as they enter had their temperature checked, guests have to wear a mask, and social distance where they can. >> it's gorgeous. >> reporter: what was your reaction when you ard that disney world was reopening? >> i think it's like pouring gasoline on a fire.
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i don't think it's going to help us drive down our case rate, i think it's going to be the opposite. >> you should take precautions but there is no need to be panicked, there is no need to be fearful. >> reporter: 41 states now report increases in average new cases compared to just two weeks ago. in phoenix, people were lining up to be tested before sun rise. the number of people getting tested is overwhelming the labs there, so that's leading to delays in getting the test results. one man in tucson reportedly waited 27 days for his. dr. anthony fauci. >> if you are going to do contact tracing and the tests come back in five to seven days, you might as well not do contact tracing because it is already too late. the hardt states ttiig now. >> i would think we need to get the states pausing in their opening process. looking at what did not work well. and try to mitigate that.
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>> reporter: the country's climt to flatten the curve is an uphill battle. take a look at the top line showing an upward climb of covid-19 cases nationwide. that is a stark contrast to new york's downward trend underneath. and the gap continues to widen. still though, officials in new york are not taking any chances. today they banned large events through september. the balance of reopening and ensuring public safety is delicate. shaquana miller, a fort lauderdale hospital worker who took patient information as they arrived tested positive for the virus and died last week. she was 35. now her three year old daughter is positive. david begnaud, cbs news, >>epter: i'm mireyaarreal iedin, the coronavirus surge in new york for months are now here, across the state numbers continue to climb at an alarming rate of nearly 10,000 cases a day and doctors are begging for
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help. the synchronized sound of nearly two dozen ventilators inside this covid icu is an eerie reminder of the wrath of this virus, doctors and nurses battling an enemy that often has the upper hand. >> i have a three year old at home, my wife is pregnant, she is also working in the hospital, but we're here. >> rteesus po lo hihto covid-19 last week. >> how did you get it? >> i don't know. >> reporter: now he has the virus. and so does his wife. a devastating reality pushing him to tears. hospitals are now treating more family units like the prietos. texas has more than 220,000 reported cases. the latino community hard hit, also accounting for 29% of deaths in the state. er nurses like jessica montemayor and sandy ramirez worry their community isn't taking this seriously. >> and it's terrifying. we're losing friends. people that we know are getting sick. >> reporter: this is the largest testing facility in the state. they are slowing down for the
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day right now. but in the morning, there are lines for miles. verag now they are averaging about 3,000 people a day with no end in sight right now, margaret. >> brennan: mireya villarreal in texas, thank you. decis the supreme court. today it rejected the argument that president trump is immune from investigation while in office, and it cleared the way for prosecutors to see the president's financial records. more now from cbs's jan crawford. >> reporter: the president has offered different reasons for his refusal to release his tax returns. >> i will release my tax returns when she releases her 33,000 emails. >> under audit, when the audit is complete, i will release them. >> reporter: but thursday the supreme court said it was no longer up to president trump. two separate decisions, both written by chief justice john roberts and joined by liberal justices and the two conservative trump appointees, that the president is not above
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the law. in the first ruling the court refused to block a subpoena from a new york district attorney investigating whether the trump campaign paid women hush money making it increasingly likely a grand jury will get the president's tax returns. in our judicial system the public has a right to every man's evidence, the court said, since the earliest days of the republic, every man has included the president of the united states. nycause of grand jury secret see of it before the november rules that evidence is not likely to become public or any of it before the november election. bat's because in the second case the court threw a wrench in house democrat efforts to issue even broader subpoenas for years hisrecords from president trump and his family and businesses. because of significant separation of powers issues raised by congressional subpoenas for the president's information, the court sent the democrats back to the drawing board to better explain why they need it.
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tior the lower courts to t'rt out and with the election one house democrat said today president trump may outrun the clock. margaret? >> brennan: jan crawford at the court tonight. president trump made clear his frustration with that supreme imed in aing and claimed in a series of tweets that he is the victim of a political prosecution. cbs's ben tracy reports tonight from the white house. >> reporter: president trump quickly and angrily lashed out at the supreme court saying courts in the past have given broad deference but not me. the president claims he is being treated unfairly, even though the two justices he appointed, brett kavanaugh and neil gorsuch voted against him in the new york case. >> you know what is going on in new york, everyone is leaving, hurneout to be a hellhole. >> reporter: this afternoon the president railed against the manhattan d.a.'s case which involves a hush-money payment to former adult film star stormy daniels.
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>> this is a political witch- witchunt, it's a hx, justnob li the mueller iestigation was a hoax that i won. >> reporter: the president barely mentioned his supreme court victory, shielding his financial records from congress but still leaving the door open for democrats to try again in lower courts. >> it is not good news for the president of the united states. it is a path that we will take. >> reporter: hours after the rulings, president trump's former personal attorney and fixer michael cohen was taken back into custody for refusing to agree to the terms of his home confinement. cohen is serving a three yea sentence for lying to congress and campaign finance charges for facilitating hush money payments to women like stormy daniels who alleged affairs with president trump. he has recently been photographed enjoying long dinners at new york city restaurants. >> i'm worried about it, i am. that's why i'm here! >> reporter: and outside trump tower today in manhattan the
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words "black lives matter" were painted on fifth avenue,g ent ts called a symbol of hate. a frequent critic of his, mayor bill de blasio also took part. today the prom plan that hys wil manufacturing and create millions of new jobs. it will be partially paid for b. margaret? >> brennan: ben tracy at the white house. thnk you. tonight tropical storm faye has formed off the north carolina coast. warnings now span from southern. a potential coronavirus vaccine made by the massachusetts company moderna should go into advance trials later this month. but even if a vaccine is proven to be safe and effective, there are concerns that a global shortage of specialized glass for vaccine vials could delay its rollout.
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cbs's imtiaz tyab takes a look we continue our series "racing to a cure." >> reporter: if the race for developing a successful coronavirus vaccine is moving at warp speed, then this factorys r of vaccines and has been tapped by pharmaceutical giant astra- zeneca to produce over a billion doses of the vaccine being trialed by oxford university. >> we have dedicated all of our manufacturing facilities at the moment for the astra-zeneca product. how to distribute it. glass viels are the safest way, they can withstand cold temperatures, are resistant to contamination but they require highly specialized machinery to make and if that means 7.7 billion glass vials are needed to treat every person on the planet, there is nowhere near enough. >> we are in a situation where lots of things have to come together. as you know, such coordination efforts at that scale also
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depend to a great degree on political support. >> reporter: the trump administration has been trying to secure supplies only for the u.s. but scientists at the w.h.o. are warning that america- first approach will only prolong this still very global pandemic, even with an effective vaccine. imtiaz tyab, cbs news, london. >> brennan: now to newly released video in the deadly police shooting of breonna taylor, an emt who was killed in march inside her own home. for the first time we are seeing the chaotic moments after she was shot. here's cbs's jericka duncan. >> come outside. >> reporter: this new video taken in march by a neighbor of breonna taylor shows a small army of police officers with their guns drawn arresting taylor's boyfriend kenneth walker. >> keep walking back! walk backwards! >> reporter: police claim they had a no-knock warrant for taylor's home because of a drug investigation but the lead officer sergeant jonathan
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mattingly told investigators in a newly released audio interview that on the night of the deadly shooting officers did knock on taylor's door. >> reporter: our intent was to give her plenty of time to come to the door because they said she is probably there alone. >> reporter: but she wasn't, taylor's boyfriend kenneth walker, a licensed gun owner fired one shot striking mattingly in the leg. >> i got four rounds off and it rounds offer and boom, boom it was sim boom, boom. but in walker's interview, he claims officers did not announce thde >> aa sudden there was a whole lot of shots, we both dropped to the ground but i just hear her screaming. >> reporter: cbs news legal analyst rikki kliemann. >> the whole point of the no- knock warrant is not to knock and announce, because what you are afraid of in a drug case is that the drugs will disappear. >> reporter: police did not find any drugs in breonna taylor's apartment and officers were not wearing body cameras when they
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executed that warrant. well today state lawmakers announced a plan to introduce a bill that would ban most no- knock warrants in the state of kentucky. margaret? >> brennan: jericka duncan, thank you. >> there is still much more news dails in the search for "glee" actress naya rivera. her heart-reaking instagram post the day before later, escaping the lockdown by letting the puppets come out and play.
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year old actress naya rivera. >> we're viewing this really as a tragic accident. >> reporter: rivera's four year old son josey was found wearing a life jacket and asleep in a boat late wednesday. the boy tonv he and his mother had been swimming but she did not get back on the rented pontoon, and an adult life vest was also found. >> we are talking about a lake on the bottom that is very sooty. some places you can only see five to six inches in front of your face. >> reporter: on tuesday rivera tweeted this picture with her son with the caption just the two of us. she divorced the boy's father after ryan actor ryan dorsey in 2018, she called josey her greatest success in her memoir. ♪ if i die young. cheerleader on "glee" for six years, she dated costar mark salling who killed himself in 2018 after pleading guilty to child pornography charges. and "glee" star corey monteith was found dead of a drug overdose in 2013. >> reporter: and in a now eerie instagram post rivera told fans
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to take every day you are alive as a blessing because tomorrow is not promised. her son josey is now with family, margaret? >> brennan: sad story, thank you. when we come back, how one man's creations are keeping a city entertained in a time of crisis. >> if you can't watch the cbs evening news, you can listen. subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. sponsored by oral b. podcasts. sponsored by or all b. e taking t saw clear or almost clear skin, and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent.
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>> brennan: at a time when so many of us are starving for entertainment, a chicago man is captivating his city with no strings attached. here's cbs's adriana diaz. >> reporter: on a leafy street in chicago. >> ladies and gentlemen. >> reporter: a voice breaks the silence of social isolation. >> boys and girls. >> reporter: it's coming from the lockdown puppet theater on thew oweowen's balcony. >> why do actors say break a leg? r job, nowcrafting animals but in the shut don he was laid off and with an excess of creative energy, he dusted off an old hobby. >> most of these take about a day to make. >> reporter: how do you do the face?
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>> i sculpt it in clay. >> reporter: his wife carla, a librarian is also out of work. >> it's really something watching him come up with the next new puppet, wondering what the reaction is going to be. address secret to avoid crowds. but they still come. >> i have people who i don't know at all stopping me on the street and thanking me for the puppet theater. >> reporter: there is a yodelin. >> what is in that word, honor. >> we get to occasionally distct people from just how heavy the world can be. >> reporter: has this taught us how much we need those distractions. >> you don't have to ask too much of people to be thrilled. >> reporter: adriana diaz, cbs news. >> now go out and be happy. >> reporter: chicago. >> bye bye. >> brennan: we all need a reminder to smile these days. reminder to smi we'll be right back. .
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>> brennan: on tomorrow's cbs evening news, steve hartman with the story of an accident and a split second decision that brought two men together. if you can't watch live don't forget to set your dvr so you can watch us later. and that's tonight's cbs evening news, i'm margaret brennan, we'll see you tomorrow. this is the "cbs overnight news". 'm chip reid reporting from the cbs studios in washington. thanks for staying with us. the sf coronirus cases and the gwing understand covid 19 tests is again straining the system. four months into the pap democratic local officials say they still don't haveor those wd
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there el drive-through testing site in the dodgers stadium parking lot in los angeles. there are similar lines of cars throughout texas where omar vee franka picks up the story. >> the fear was catching it and giving it to somebody else. >> uh-oh. >> after driving more than an hour he waited more than four hours at an austin testing site before he was swabbed. >> you got this. >> can see how that might discourage people? >> absolutely. i'm surprised that i didn't see more people leave. >> how would you describe the process to somebody who's kind of on the phelps about getting the test. >> it's something that you have to commit to. it's not pleasant. it's not fun but that's not the point. the point is safeguarding
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yourself and others. >> in dallas this location was testing 600 people a day and th maxed out.o they i a row the demand for tests is so great we're told people start lining up at 6:00 a.m. this was the scene last weekdn april, health officials were ta day. now, it's over 50,000. but the state falls behind41 others in terms of tests performed per 100,000 people. according to targets laid out by the harvard global health institute, texas would need to increase testing to 117,000 people a day to keep the outbreak under control. health officials say the lone star state faces chaenge size demographics. rebecca fisher is an epidemiologist at texas a&m school of health.
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